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I believe that these are adequately covered by: A small room or covered structure, especially one of rough construction, used for storage or penning animals. This last would benefit from further attention. DCDuringTALK12:43, 21 January 2010 (UTC)Reply
Both ambitransitive and bitransitive are ways of marking en.wikt as being for language insiders only, which does seem to be the reality, so perhaps it would be truth in advertising. Combining transitive and intransitive into one sense means that the definition cannot be subsitutable, which is, I think, a desideratum of a good definition. Non-gloss (good for grammaticals and interjections) or full-sentence (used in some language-learner dictionaries (COBUILD, Encarta) are alternative approaches.
I do see that both transitive and intransitive may be required. How does the transitive sense work? Is it "He cribbed the answers from an e-mail from his friend in the earlier class."? I guess it would usually be passive. DCDuringTALK18:27, 22 January 2010 (UTC)Reply
Latest comment: 5 years ago1 comment1 person in discussion
Chambers 1908 has a different twist on this: "(colloquial) a translation of a classic baldly literal, for lazy schoolboys" — i.e. the Spark Notes of its day! Equinox◑20:45, 1 June 2019 (UTC)Reply
merge verb senses 3 and 4
Latest comment: 3 years ago1 comment1 person in discussion
# (transitive) To collect one or more passages and/or references for use in a speech, written document or as an aid for some task; to create a crib sheet.
The latter sense seems to me to be a natural outgrowth of the former, rather than an independent meaning. It's copying passages/references as an aid in some task, generally an illicit or shameful one. I think these should be combined. (Actually I went ahead and combined them, but thought better of doing it unilaterally and reverted it.) --157.131.197.20020:37, 31 December 2020 (UTC)Reply